Commit Graph

6 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
5dfef1ae35 Reverting to 2_2x BPY
I was careful in selectively rolling back revisions, but if you've committed changes unrelated to BPY mixed with BPY changes, I might have reverted those too, so please double check.
2007-12-17 20:21:06 +00:00
ee5dc4d0bf removed duplicate functionality, macro's and functions existed to check a PyObjects type, now only use macro's 2007-03-15 01:09:14 +00:00
e60291d39c Header file clean up and warning fixes
- Mostly this cleans up the #includes and header files in the python project.
- Warning fixes are mostly casting issues and misc fixes. General warning clean up.
- #include Python.h MUST come as the first include to avoid the POSIX redefine warning in the unix makefiles
- fno-strict-aliasing flag added to makefile to fix a unavoidable type punning warning in types.c
2005-07-18 03:50:37 +00:00
Stephen Swaney
0fdc0ce297 Another step in the Big Bpy Cleanup.
- move static declarations and data definitions out of headers.
  the BGL module still need cleaning.

- move declarations out of modules.h and into appropriate .h files.
  modules.h still exists as a container for the few modules that
  need to #include almost everything.

- all files now have a $Id tag and have been formatted by indent

there are no changes to executable code.

pre-commit versions are tagged with bpy-cleanup-pre-20041007
for the sake of paranoia.
2004-10-07 19:25:40 +00:00
Stephen Swaney
a509b8adc9 Another round in the Great BPy Cleanup:
Run everything thru indent to cleanup spaces vs tabs.
Clean up some of the comments by hand.
BGL.c was not touched due to all that macro wackyness.

There are no functional changes to the code.
Pre-indent versions of source are tagged with
tag bpy-cleanup-20040925 , just in case.
2004-09-25 20:30:40 +00:00
Stephen Swaney
bce2c02fdd New Curve method Curve.appendPoint( numcurve, newpoint ) to add
points to a Curve.

New supporting module CurNurb to provide access to the curves in a Curve
and their associated points.

Curve module now supports Python iterator and sequence protocols.
This allows typical python programming idioms using 'for' statement
and the [] operator.

# example 1
for curve in a_curve:
	for point in curve:
		print point

#example 2

curnurb = a_curve[0]
curnurb.append( [1,1,1,1] )

Still under construction.  Epydoc will follow.
2004-07-21 21:01:15 +00:00